Friday, 9 September 2016

So like most Australians I think we need to pass marriage equality and move on to more important issues. Makeitlaw.com.au ran a campaign where they automatically emailed your state reps, I thought it was a good idea so I did it, using their canned email myslef;

A plebiscite will be costly, divisive and damaging to the LGBTIQ community.

It is also wasteful and unnecessary given that marriage equality will ultimately have to be resolved in parliament anyway.

I urge you to support a cross-party free vote in parliament as soon as possible so marriage equality can be resolved quickly and Australia can move on.

Best wishes,Morgan Storey,

*************************************** Little did I know that this would get a response. I thought it would be pretty ineffectual, but hey I may as well try.
Well it got a very canned response from Paul Feltcher... err I mean Fletcher (slip of the tongue);

Thank
you for your email concerning a same sex marriage plebiscite. It is
very important that I am
aware of the feelings of my constituents in Bradfield and so I
appreciate the time you have taken to inform me of your views on this
issue.

I
am very pleased that in recent years Australia’s laws have been changed
to remove discrimination
against homosexuals and same-sex couples. These include changes to
laws in the areas of superannuation, taxation, social security, aged
care and immigration.

The
Howard Government reformed the law in several areas in this respect,
and it was the Howard Government
that began the process that led to the 2008 legislation of the Rudd
Government that substantively removed discrimination for same sex
couples.

These were all appropriate and necessary reforms. They have taken Australia in a very positive direction,
and (thankfully) a very long way from the time when homosexual acts were criminalised.

The
institution of marriage has a cultural and religious significance
developed over many centuries.
Traditionally, the institution is based on the “the union of man and a
woman, to the exclusion of all others, voluntarily entered into for
life”. That is the definition set out in Australian law. This in no way
seeks to diminish the committed and loving relationships
– both heterosexual and same-sex – that exist outside of the
institution of marriage.

I support the Liberal Party’s policy to have a plebiscite, so that this matter can be decided by
a vote of the Australian people. Allow me to explain the process by which the Coalition came to this decision.

At the 2013 election, the Coalition’s stated position in relation to same sex marriage was that if
the matter came up in the next term of Parliament, it would be considered by the Coalition Party Room in the usual way.

Subsequently Liberal MP Warren Entsch advised the Party Room that he proposed to introduce a Private
Member’s Bill which would change the law regarding marriage so as to permit same sex marriage.

Accordingly,
consistent with the position the Coalition took to the 2013 election,
the matter was
considered by the Coalition Party Room on 11 August 2015. There was a
long discussion, extending for some six hours, on the Government’s
policy in this area. More than 90 Members and Senators spoke. The
discussion revealed a strong majority in favour of maintaining
the Coalition’s existing policy position.

Nevertheless,
because of the unique and deeply personal nature of this issue, Prime
Minister Abbott
indicated that a decision on same-sex marriage would be made by all
Australians via a plebiscite after the election. This would allow this
deeply personal issue, on which people of goodwill can hold strongly
divergent views, to be resolved by a vote of the
people – rather than being left in the hands of politicians.

Following
the change of leadership, Prime Minister Turnbull indicated that the
Liberal Party would
maintain this position, and took this to the 2016 Federal election. The
Government is now working to determine the earliest practical time to
hold the plebiscite, probably in the first half of 2017. When the matter
subsequently came to the Parliament, I would
vote in accordance with the judgement of the Australian people in the
plebiscite.

Thank you for taking the time to write.

Regards

Paul Fletcher MPFederal Member for Bradfield

Minister for Urban Infrastructure

Level 2, 280 Pacific Highway

Lindfield NSW 2070

Suite M151 Parliament House

Canberra ACT 2600

(02 9465 3950 |7 02 9465 3999 |SYDNEY

(02 6277 7790 |CANBERRA

************************************************

Me, being me I couldn't not respond;

Hi,

Lets break down your canned response below, to show how wrong you truly are.

I doubt I really changed any minds there, but hey lets make the full discourse public and see if I can change any onlookers. I have yet to find a rational argument against marriage equality. But hey, politicians aren't exactly rational are they.

Oh and I got a response to the last email too, that was interesting in its brevity;